Saturday, April 25, 2026
StockstToday.com Logo
  • Home
  • Tech & Software
  • Earnings
  • Analysis
  • Trading & Momentum
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Banking & Insurance
  • AI & Quantum Computing
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Tech & Software
  • Earnings
  • Analysis
  • Trading & Momentum
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Banking & Insurance
  • AI & Quantum Computing
No Result
View All Result
StocksToday.com Logo
No Result
View All Result
Home Commodities

Graphite One’s Alaska Prize Now Holds a Rare-Earth Ace as Financing Clock Ticks

Jackson Burston by Jackson Burston
April 25, 2026
in Commodities, Earnings, Industrial
0
Graphite One Stock
0
SHARES
6
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Graphite One is no longer just a graphite developer. Independent tests on drill cores from its Graphite Creek deposit in Alaska have confirmed the presence of five key magnetic rare earths — neodymium, praseodymium and dysprosium among them — locked inside garnet minerals. That geological twist matters because it sidesteps the toxic baggage of uranium and thorium that typically plagues rare-earth projects. A US national laboratory will begin evaluating extraction methods in 2026, and if the results hold, the company could effectively mine two strategic commodities from one hole.

The discovery reshapes the economics of what was already the largest known graphite deposit in the United States. But it also arrives at a moment when the company’s financial runway is under intense scrutiny.

A $2.07 Billion Backstop With a Gap

The US Export-Import Bank has conditionally pledged up to $2.07 billion in loans — $670 million earmarked for the Alaska mine and $1.4 billion for the planned processing plant in Ohio. That covers roughly 70 percent of the estimated project cost. Management is now in talks with several North American investment banks to secure the remaining 30 percent.

The urgency is plain. Graphite One posted a net loss of roughly $9 million last year, a figure that reflects rising development costs typical of pre-production miners but also underscores how much capital is still needed before a single tonne of material moves.

Permitting Pressure and a Lost Edge

Time is not on the company’s side. In March, Graphite One lost its exclusive status under the FAST-41 accelerated US permitting program. Two rival projects — Westwater Resources’ Coosa project in Alabama and Titan Mining’s Kilbourne project in New York — have now received the same preferential treatment. All three must complete federal environmental reviews by September 29, 2026, or forfeit the fast-track benefits. Only after that deadline can local permitting in Alaska begin, with construction targeted for 2027 and first production three years later.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Graphite One?

Tariff Door Slams Shut

The trade policy landscape has also shifted against the company. The US International Trade Commission recently ruled that Chinese graphite imports do not materially harm domestic industry, effectively killing a proposed 160 percent tariff. With China controlling more than 95 percent of global graphite processing capacity, US developers have lost a critical protective shield. The ITC is set to publish its full written report on April 26, which will lay out the legal reasoning and redefine the regulatory environment for the sector.

Demand Locked In, But Not Yet Delivered

On the commercial front, Graphite One has secured a second non-binding supply agreement with electric-vehicle maker Lucid Group, this time covering natural graphite for battery anodes over an initial five-year term. The material would be mined in Alaska and processed at the Ohio facility, where synthetic graphite production is slated to begin in 2028. By 2032, management expects the plant to reach full capacity, supplying enough anode material for roughly two million EVs annually.

Market Mood: Recovery, Not Celebration

The stock has been volatile. Shares trade around $0.84 to $0.85, reflecting a roughly 27 percent decline since the start of the year. But the trend has improved: the stock has climbed about 21 to 22 percent over the past month as investors digest the rare-earth news and the EXIM loan progress. The geopolitical tailwind is real — China has already begun curbing graphite exports — but the permitting and financing deadlines leave little margin for error.

Graphite One’s story is no longer a single-asset narrative. It is a dual-mineral bet with a ticking clock, a partial government backstop, and a market that is watching every deadline.

Ad

Graphite One Stock: Buy or Sell?! New Graphite One Analysis from April 25 delivers the answer:

The latest Graphite One figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for Graphite One investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from April 25.

Graphite One: Buy or sell? Read more here...

Tags: Graphite One
Jackson Burston

Jackson Burston

Related Posts

Microsoft Stock
AI & Quantum Computing

Microsoft’s $281 Billion OpenAI Question Looms Over a Make-or-Break Earnings Report

April 25, 2026
Barrick Mining Stock
Commodities

Barrick Mining’s $60 Billion Spin-Off Hangs on a Nevada Courtroom Showdown

April 25, 2026
Vulcan Energy Stock
Automotive & E-Mobility

Vulcan Energy’s Frankfurt Spade Hits Dirt as €40 Million Siemens Deal Caps Supplier Lineup

April 25, 2026
Next Post
Nvidia Stock

Nvidia’s $5 Trillion Breakout: How Intel’s Shock Earnings Rewired the Chip Rally

Novo Nordisk Stock

Novo Nordisk’s Teen Pill Win Offers a Rebound, But the Payer Puzzle Remains Unsolved

Fintechwerx International So Stock

Fintechwerx’s AI Pitch to Credit Unions Collides With a Stock Price in Freefall

Recommended

BigBearai Holdings Stock

BigBear.ai Shares Surge on Major Naval Defense Contract

7 months ago
Opendoor Technologies Stock

Opendoor Stock Stages Remarkable 2025 Recovery

7 months ago
Voestalpine Stock

Voestalpine Shares Face Critical Test at €30 Threshold

7 months ago
Berkley Stock

W.R. Berkley Affirms Dividend Strength Amid Quarterly Earnings Dip

8 months ago

Categories

  • AI & Quantum Computing
  • Analysis
  • Analyst Ratings
  • Asian Markets
  • Automotive & E-Mobility
  • Banking & Insurance
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Bonds
  • Breaking News
  • Business & Industry Trends
  • Cannabis
  • Chemicals
  • Commodities
  • Consumer & Luxury
  • Crypto Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Cyber Security
  • DAX
  • Defense & Aerospace
  • Dividends
  • Dow Jones
  • E-Commerce
  • Earnings
  • Emerging Markets
  • Energy & Oil
  • ETF
  • Ethereum & Altcoins
  • European Markets
  • Forex
  • Gaming & Metaverse
  • Gold & Precious Metals
  • Healthcare
  • Hydrogen
  • Index
  • Industrial
  • Insider Trading
  • IPOs
  • Market Commentary
  • Market News
  • MDAX & SDAX
  • Mergers & Acquisitions
  • Nasdaq
  • Newsletter
  • Penny Stocks
  • Pharma & Biotech
  • Real Estate & REITs
  • Renewable Energy
  • S&P 500
  • Semiconductors
  • Space
  • Stock Picks
  • Stock Targets
  • Stocks
  • TecDAX
  • Tech & Software
  • Telecommunications
  • Trading & Momentum
  • Turnaround
  • Uncategorized
  • Value & Growth

Topics

Adobe Alibaba Alphabet Amazon AMD Apple ASML BioNTech Bitcoin Bloom Energy Broadcom Coinbase D-Wave Quantum Eli Lilly Fiserv IBM Intel Kraft Heinz Marvell Technology META Micron Microsoft MP Materials MSCI World ETF Netflix Newmont Mining Novo Nordisk Nvidia Ocugen Oracle Palantir PayPal Plug Power Realty Income Robinhood Rocket Lab USA Salesforce Strategy Synopsys Take-Two Tesla Tilray Unitedhealth Uranium Energy Viking Therapeutics
No Result
View All Result

Highlights

Vulcan Energy’s Frankfurt Spade Hits Dirt as €40 Million Siemens Deal Caps Supplier Lineup

ServiceNow Posts Blowout AI Numbers, Then Gets Punched in the Mouth by Wall Street

Google’s $750 Million Partner Fund Hints at Cloud’s Next Growth Phase

Deutz Shifts Gears: Defense and Energy Bets Emerge as Tariff Strategy Takes Shape

BioNTech’s COO Cashes Out $5.5 Million Just as Cancer Pipeline Momentum Builds

Gold’s Dual Narrative: Fed Stability Meets Wall Street Skepticism

Trending

Microsoft Stock
AI & Quantum Computing

Microsoft’s $281 Billion OpenAI Question Looms Over a Make-or-Break Earnings Report

by SiterGedge
April 25, 2026
0

When Microsoft reports fiscal third-quarter results after the US market close on Wednesday, the numbers will be...

Barrick Mining Stock

Barrick Mining’s $60 Billion Spin-Off Hangs on a Nevada Courtroom Showdown

April 25, 2026
Micron Stock

Micron’s Washington Play: How Lobbying and AI Demand Converged at 424 Euros

April 25, 2026
Vulcan Energy Stock

Vulcan Energy’s Frankfurt Spade Hits Dirt as €40 Million Siemens Deal Caps Supplier Lineup

April 25, 2026
ServiceNow Stock

ServiceNow Posts Blowout AI Numbers, Then Gets Punched in the Mouth by Wall Street

April 25, 2026

StocksToday.com is your one-stop destination for the latest stock news and analysis. We provide in-depth coverage of the stock market, including market news, company news, sector news, IPO news, investment strategies, personal finance, international markets, and more.

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • Microsoft’s $281 Billion OpenAI Question Looms Over a Make-or-Break Earnings Report
  • Barrick Mining’s $60 Billion Spin-Off Hangs on a Nevada Courtroom Showdown
  • Micron’s Washington Play: How Lobbying and AI Demand Converged at 424 Euros

Category

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Imprint
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2023 StocksToday.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Tech & Software
  • Earnings
  • Analysis
  • Trading & Momentum
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Banking & Insurance
  • AI & Quantum Computing

© 2023 StocksToday.com